Viridiana Martinez

Viridiana
Martinez, 25—undocumented, unafraid and unashamed. Martinez is
co-founder of the North Carolina Dream Team and a young community
organizer and activist for immigrant rights. She only discovered her
illegal status after graduating from high school. Born in Mexico and
raised in a little town in North Carolina called Sanford, she has lived
in the United States since the age of seven, when her parents
immigrated. The NC DREAM Team is an organization composed of
undocumented immigrant youth and allies, dedicated to the creation of a
sustainable, community-led immigrant rights movement in North Carolina
and to helping undocumented youth recognize their individual and
collective power to activate their communities.

Christine
Joy Ferrer: What was it like growing up as a young, undocumented Latina
in the South and how has your identity influenced your work?Viridiana Martinez: If you look at the undocumented youth
movements, most of the founders and cofounders are women. A lot of us
are getting older; we’ve had to grow up so much more quickly than some
of our more advantaged peers. I’m not in California. I’m not in Miami.
I’m not in New York or Texas. I’m in North Carolina. Reality in the
South is a lot different than any of these places. There is no Chicano
movement. Many of us are the first generation of Mexican and Latin
American immigrants. The history of this region is the struggle
existing. We’re the pioneers in terms of immigration work, immigrant
rights, and activism. The challenges we face can be seen in either of
two ways. One, this is so challenging, I’m not going to do it and I
don’t want to get involved, or two, this is challenging, this is risky,
and this is crazy but I need to do it. We need this open mind; this
uninhibited creativity to seek different opportunities in spite of
obstacles. Let’s find opportunity in these tragedies to organize and to
expose our reality.
I have the privilege of being a fair-skinned Latina, and I’m fluent in
English, so I don’t get profiled as much or as often as other people do.
It’s different being a fair-skinned Latina fluent in English in the
South compared to a farm worker who’s not fluent in English and not
fair-skinned. Being aware of my own privilege I think is very important
in doing this work.

I got pulled over a month or so ago for speeding. My license expired
last year. The cop came to my window and gave me the ticket and said,
“You know why I pulled you over—for speeding. And I’m also giving you a
ticket for driving with an expired license. You know it’s been expired
since last July, right? Why haven’t you gotten it renewed?”

And I said, “Because I can’t, I’m undocumented.”

I’m at a point where I’m like, why the hell do I need to hide this
reality? This is what I’m living. But this consciousness isn’t the same
situation for all immigrants. Many are still living with this
internalized pressure.

Deportations are happening every single day through programs like 287G
and Secure Communities. Supposedly, it’s to find criminals but our
people are getting racially profiled. In the South, you have these like
hick cops that are pulling over our folks everyday. They position
themselves strategically near mobile homes and trailer parks or in
neighborhoods that are predominately immigrant. They do so to target our
people. I get three to five calls at least every two weeks, or emails
saying: “My son is getting deported. My daughter got pulled over. What
do we do?”

Ferrer: What did the release of Uriel Aldesto, an undocumented youth,
mean for the immigrant community, activists, and others who have been
mobilizing against deportations, institutionalized discrimination and
the exploitation of their communities? Martinez: This was a major victory in the fight against
deportations. It proves that a community standing behind a person can
move mountains. But it also exposed the structural racism and
discrimination within our communities. It was also a reflection of our
reality. Aldesto has a criminal background. Most of our youth are not
valedictorians. They are not the cream of the crop necessarily in terms
of what Anglo schools want to define as the cream of the crop. They
don’t have the perfect, squeaky-clean profiles. We grow up facing some
real life challenges and some of us are lucky to have both of our
parents healthy, working and loving each other. We must continue to
organize the community, get youth to understand the importance of coming
out as undocumented, and educate people. Sometimes a family doesn’t
realize the seriousness of the situation until one of their own is put
in deportation proceedings or picked up for driving without a license or
for something that simple.

Ferrer: What is necessary to achieve a just reform that is acceptable
to and guided by the voices of those directly affected by our broken
immigration system?Martinez: Whatever legislation is necessary to serve our
undocumented immigrant community, we first need those directly affected
to speak for themselves.

Our youth who are graduating from high school feel absolutely hopeless.
This is very real, the pain, the anger, the confusion, and lack of hope,
because you don’t see the light at the end of the tunnel. There are
cases where some have committed suicide. One of our biggest focuses
right now is on the mental health of undocumented immigrants. We’re
hearing more and more stories of undocumented youth and adults living
with mental health issues. Whether it’s depression, anxiety, attempted
suicide, or that we’re hurting ourselves. Sometimes the help you need,
to just hear that you’re not alone, or to vent with somebody, requires
the understanding from those who are in the same boat.

We need to take the leadership as undocumented youth and organize. We
need to create spaces, whether it’s at youth empowerment summits,
rallies or town hall meetings, where youth can get together. We must
take the time to develop relationships, by creating a safe space where
more undocumented youth can open up about their lives, about the abuse,
the trauma, that they have lived to get on the path to liberation—a
space where they are not afraid or ashamed. Where they are understood
more than anything.

And having allies that are conscientious, who admit, “I am never going
to know what it’s like to be in your position because I have papers, but
want to help.” These are the people that we need beside us, behind us,
so that we can be in the forefront and feel supported. And if we fall,
somebody’s going to catch us as we fight for this. All this, in
consequence, leads to lobbying efforts, rallies, and protests, where
youth are no longer afraid to hold a blow horn and speak out.

That’s why these organizations that are undocumented youth-led and for
undocumented youth are so important. We’re not jut talking about
legislation anymore. We’re talking about our own daily lives. And we
need to be our own power. We need to be our own voice. We need to be our
biggest advocates.

Christine Joy Ferrer is
the web and publishing assistant for Urban Habitat and the creator of
eyesopenedblog.com, dedicated to all artists of color committed to
social justice. For more information on the North Carolina Dream Team,
visit: ncdreamteam.org.

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